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1 sprout
I [spraʊt]1) (on plant, tree, potato) germoglio m., getto m.2) (anche Brussels sprout) cavoletto m. di Bruxelles, cavolino m. di BruxellesII 1. [spraʊt]verbo transitivo fare crescere [ beard]2.1) [bulb, seed] germogliare; [grass, weeds] spuntare•* * *1. verb1) (to (cause to) develop leaves, shoots etc: The trees are sprouting new leaves.) germogliare2) ((of animals, birds etc) to develop eg horns, produce eg feathers: The young birds are sprouting their first feathers.) mettere2. noun(a new shoot or bud: bean sprouts.) germoglio, getto* * *[spraʊt]1. n(from bulb, seeds) germoglioSee:2. vt(leaves, shoots) mettere, produrre3. vi* * *sprout /spraʊt/n.1 germoglio; getto3 (fam.) rampollo; giovane discendente.(to) sprout /spraʊt/A v. i.1 germogliare; germinare; rampollareB v. t.* * *I [spraʊt]1) (on plant, tree, potato) germoglio m., getto m.2) (anche Brussels sprout) cavoletto m. di Bruxelles, cavolino m. di BruxellesII 1. [spraʊt]verbo transitivo fare crescere [ beard]2.1) [bulb, seed] germogliare; [grass, weeds] spuntare• -
2 put out
2) (extinguish) spegnere [fire, candle]3) (take outside) portare, mettere fuori [bin, garbage]; fare uscire [ cat]5) (arrange) mettere (a disposizione) [food, dishes, towels etc.]6) (sprout) mettere [bud, root]7) (cause to be wrong) fare sbagliare, fare sballare [figure, estimate, result]8) (dislocate) lussarsi, slogarsi [ shoulder]9) (subcontract) dare fuori [ work] (to a); put [sb.] out10) (inconvenience) arrecare disturbo, scomodareto put oneself out — disturbarsi, darsi pena ( to do per fare)
to put oneself out for sb. — darsi pena o scomodarsi per aiutare qcn
11) (annoy) seccare, contrariare12) (evict) buttare fuori, sfrattare* * *1) (to extend (a hand etc): He put out his hand to steady her.) tendere, allungare2) ((of plants etc) to produce (shoots, leaves etc).) mettere3) (to extinguish (a fire, light etc): The fire brigade soon put out the fire.) spegnere4) (to issue, give out: They put out a distress call.) emettere, lanciare5) (to cause bother or trouble to: Don't put yourself out for my sake!) disturbarsi, scomodarsi6) (to annoy: I was put out by his decision.) importunare* * *1. vt + adv1) (place outside) mettere fuorito be put out — (asked to leave) essere buttato (-a) fuori
2) (stretch out: arm, foot, leg) allungare, (one's hand) porgere, (tongue) tirare fuori, (push out: leaves etc) spuntareto put one's head out of the window — metter fuori or sporgere la testa dalla finestra
3) (lay out in order) disporre4) (circulate: propaganda) fare, (news) annunciare, (rumour) mettere in giro, (bring out: new book) pubblicare, (regulation) emettere5) (extinguish: fire, cigarette, light) spegnere6) (discontent, vex) contrariare, seccareto be put out by sth/sb — essere contrariato (-a) da qn/qc
7)to put o.s. out (for sb) — scomodarsi or disturbarsi per qn8) (dislocate: shoulder, knee) lussarsi, (back) farsi uno strappo a9) (subcontract) subappaltare2. vi + adv* * *2) (extinguish) spegnere [fire, candle]3) (take outside) portare, mettere fuori [bin, garbage]; fare uscire [ cat]5) (arrange) mettere (a disposizione) [food, dishes, towels etc.]6) (sprout) mettere [bud, root]7) (cause to be wrong) fare sbagliare, fare sballare [figure, estimate, result]8) (dislocate) lussarsi, slogarsi [ shoulder]9) (subcontract) dare fuori [ work] (to a); put [sb.] out10) (inconvenience) arrecare disturbo, scomodareto put oneself out — disturbarsi, darsi pena ( to do per fare)
to put oneself out for sb. — darsi pena o scomodarsi per aiutare qcn
11) (annoy) seccare, contrariare12) (evict) buttare fuori, sfrattare
См. также в других словарях:
Sprout — (sprout), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Sprouted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Sprouting}.] [OE. sprouten, spruten; akin to OFries. spr[=u]ta, AS. spre[ o]tan, D. spruiten, G. spriessen, Sw. spruta to squirt, to spout. Cf. {Sprit}, v. t. & i., {Sprit} a spar,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sprout — ► VERB 1) produce shoots. 2) grow (plant shoots or hair). 3) start to grow or develop. ► NOUN 1) a shoot of a plant. 2) a Brussels sprout. ORIGIN Germanic … English terms dictionary
sprout — [sprout] vi. [ME sprouten < OE sprutan, akin to Ger spriessen < IE * spreud < base * (s)p(h)er : see SPREAD] 1. to begin to grow or germinate; give off shoots or buds 2. to grow or develop rapidly vt. to cause to sprout or grow n. [ME… … English World dictionary
sprout — [[t]spra͟ʊt[/t]] sprouts, sprouting, sprouted 1) VERB When plants, vegetables, or seeds sprout, they produce new shoots or leaves. It only takes a few days for beans to sprout. 2) VERB When leaves, shoots, or plants sprout somewhere, they grow… … English dictionary
sprout — I UK [spraʊt] / US verb Word forms sprout : present tense I/you/we/they sprout he/she/it sprouts present participle sprouting past tense sprouted past participle sprouted 1) [intransitive] if a leaf or other part of a plant is sprouting, it is… … English dictionary
sprout — sprout1 [ spraut ] verb 1. ) intransitive if a leaf or other part of a plant is sprouting, it is beginning to grow on the plant a ) intransitive if a plant sprouts, new leaves or SHOOTS begin to grow on it b ) transitive to make a plant start to… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
sprout — /sprowt/, v.i. 1. to begin to grow; shoot forth, as a plant from a seed. 2. (of a seed or plant) to put forth buds or shoots. 3. to develop or grow quickly: a boy awkwardly sprouting into manhood. v.t. 4. to cause to sprout. 5. to remove sprouts… … Universalium
sprout — [[t]spraʊt[/t]] v. i. 1) bot to begin to grow; shoot forth 2) bot (of a seed or plant) to put forth buds or shoots 3) bot a shoot of a plant 4) bot a new growth from a seed, rootstock, or the like 5) something suggesting a sprout, as a young… … From formal English to slang
sprout — sprout1 [spraut] v [: Old English; Origin: sprutan] 1.) [I and T] if vegetables, seeds, or plants sprout, they start to grow, producing ↑shoots, ↑buds, or leaves ▪ Move the pots outside when the seeds begin to sprout. ▪ Trees were starting to… … Dictionary of contemporary English
sprout — 1 verb 1 (I) if leaves or buds sprout they appear and begin to grow 2 (I, T) if vegetables, seeds, or plants sprout they start to produce shoots, or buds: Keep the tray away from direct sunlight until the seeds begin to sprout. | sprout sth: The… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
sprout — verb produce shoots. ↘grow (plant shoots or hair). ↘start to grow or develop. noun 1》 a shoot of a plant. 2》 short for Brussels sprout. Origin ME: of W. Gmc origin … English new terms dictionary